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Month: May 2007

St. Ronnie And The Mulletheads

by digby

In anticipation of the big GOP Reagan fest today, I’ve donned my Flock of Seagulls t-shirt and rented Rambo to get into the mood. Yes, I’m old enough to remember Reagan. But I was out of the country as much as possible, so the Reagan years seem to me to be a vague pastiche of exotic beverages and very, very large shoulder pads. It was quite a long time ago, after all.

It’s somewhat telling that Republicans have to go back a quarter century to find idols they can sell considering they owned the congress for the past 12 years and the presidency for the past six, but there you have it. If they have to dredge up the past if I were them, I think they should turn to Ike. He really did help save the world and they even named a smashing jacket after him. He’s certainly as relevant as Reagan is to today’s issues.

I plan to watch the debate tonight as painful as it will surely be. I’d love it if Matthews would take the trivial tack as Williams did with the Dems last week, but I don’t expect it. One would think that if they can discuss Edwards’ haircuts and Joe Biden’s gaffes in a debate they could certainly ask about McCain’s temper tantrums. I doubt that they will even near the issue of ties to corrupt, rich businessmen as they did with Obama because well, the debate only lasts an hour and a half. (And I would think it’s important to hear about Romney’s underwear and Rudy’s ferret problem. These are character issues.)But Matthews probably won’t ask any of these questions. Republicans are serious, manly people and deserve to be treated with respect.

So, this will end up being a contest for best Ronald Reagan imitator, with Matthews no doubt feeding them straight lines. (It’s too bad Rich Little bombed so badly because his Ronnie impression is actually damned good — and I think he’d make a much better president than any of these guys.)If that sounds as stultifying to you as it does to me, perhaps you can liven it up with a rousing game of Conservative Failure Buzzword Bingo! It may be the only way to get through it.

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Keeping It Close

by digby

I have said throughout the Bush years that Democrats suffered from the fact that we not only had to win, but we had to win big enough that the Republicans can’t steal it. In a country that is closely divided as ours has been throughout this period, particularly in important swing states, suppressing the Democratic vote was an excellent way for GOP crooks and cheaters to win.

Here’s McClatchy’s latest on Missouri:

Accusations about voter fraud seemed to fly from every direction in Missouri before last fall’s elections. State and national Republicans leaders fretted that dead people might vote or that some live people might vote more than once.

The threat to the integrity of the election was seen as so grave that Bradley Schlozman, the acting chief of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and later the U.S. attorney in Kansas City, twice wielded the power of the federal government to try to protect the balloting. The Republican-controlled Missouri General Assembly also stepped into action.

Now, six months after freshman Missouri Sen. Jim Talent’s defeat handed Democrats control of the U.S. Senate, disclosures in the wake of the firings of eight U.S. attorneys show that that Republican campaign to protect the balloting was not as it appeared. No significant voter fraud was ever proved.

The preoccupation with ballot fraud in Missouri was part of a wider national effort that critics charge was aimed at protecting the Republican majority in Congress by dampening Democratic turnout. That effort included stiffer voter-identification requirements, wholesale purges of names from lists of registered voters and tight policing of liberal get-out-the-vote drives.

Bush administration officials deny those claims. But they’ve gotten traction in recent weeks because three of the U.S. attorneys ousted by the Justice Department charge that they lost their jobs because they failed to prove Republican allegations of voter fraud. They say their inquiries found little evidence to support the claims.

Few have endorsed the strategy of pursuing allegations of voter fraud with more enthusiasm than White House political guru Karl Rove. And nowhere has the plan been more apparent than in Missouri.

With populations that don’t necessarily trust the authorities to be impartial even when the stakes are huge, asking them to run a gauntlet of legal hurdles in order to vote pretty much assures that quite a few of them won’t bother. In a cynical nation that can barely get a majority of its eligible citizens to vote anyway, you can potentially peel off a percentage or two just by making voting a pain in the neck.

You would think that nobody in his right mind would actually work to keep the country divided so they can steal elections, but you have to wonder if that played a factor in Rove’s “feed the base” legislative strategy,which Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson described in their book Off Center as a conscious choice to pass bills with as few members of the other party as possible — a highly unusual and perhaps unprecedented way of doing things. This was done ostensibly to deliver to a base that they believed was large enough to win elections on its own (with the help of a handful of faux moderates who were given “backlash insurance“) as well as keep the other side looking helpless and foolish as they could never quite win anything at all, thus demoralizing their own base.

I have no way of knowing, of course, but it would be in keeping with the hubristic and reflexively dishonest Rovian approach to politics if rather than seeking to truly create a governing majority, he consciously sought to keep the electorate very closely polarized so that he could both deliver to the base and keep them engaged — and also win those necessarily close elections through the most sophisticated voter suppression machine in history. (And yes, there were probably shenanigans with the voting machines as well.)

It’s only a crackpot theory, but it wouldn’t surprise me. The man always assumed he could keep a hundred balls in the air at once. Unfortunately, his president and vehicle for this new political machine was so inept at actual governance that the Democrats were able to win big enough in 2006 that he couldn’t steal it. And now they have subpoena power.

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Harvey Mansfield

by tristero

Digby first alerted me to this unspeakably repellent essay by Harvey Mansfield in the Wall Street Journal online and also to Glenn Greenwald’s discussion of it. It is well worth reading all this material but what caught my eye was this from Glenn:

[R]eading Mansfield has real value for understanding the dominant right-wing movement in this country. Because he is an academic, and a quite intelligent one, he makes intellectually honest arguments, by which I mean that he does not disguise what he thinks in politically palatable slogans, but instead really describes the actual premises on which political beliefs are based.

And that is Mansfield’s value; he is a clear and honest embodiment of what the Bush movement is.

Let me start off by saying that there are few bloggers I admire more than Glenn Greenwald. He is a genuine asset to Salon’s staff and, frankly, he deserves a far wider audience than that. Glenn makes elaborate, well-documented arguments in a passionate voice that never really loses control even when he’s clearly deeply angry at some Bush administration idiocy.

But I’d like to use Glenn’s use words “honest” and “intelligent” when referring to Harvey Mansfield as a way to examine the rhetorical schemes and scams Mansfield uses. The way I see it, Mansfield is honest the way Cheney is a crack shot (drunk or sober). And Mansfield is intelligent the way a pretzel is smart when compared to the current Occupant of the White House. But I should be clear that while I would never describe a rightwing extremist with any positive adjective, I have no bone to pick with Glenn. Harvey Mansfield’s the boner.

Here’s a few examples of what Mansfield’s up to. I’m not going to “engage” his take on history for one specific reason: there’s nothing intellectually coherent enough here to engage. There is only an utterly specious assertion of the rightwing will to power trumped up sleazy rhetorical stunts.

Let’s examine paragraph 3 of Mansfield’s essay:

In other circumstances I could see myself defending the rule of law. Americans are fortunate to have a Constitution that accommodates different circumstances. Its flexibility keeps it in its original form and spirit a “living constitution,” ready for change, and open to new necessities and opportunities. The “living constitution” conceived by the Progressives actually makes it a prisoner of ongoing events and perceived trends. To explain the constitutional debate between the strong executive and the rule of law I will concentrate on its sources in political philosophy and, for greater clarity, ignore the constitutional law emerging from it.

Mansfield is being highly disingenuous and evasive here. Take sentence 1: “In other circumstances I could see myself defending the rule of law.” Folks, I don’t think it’s any stretch at all to conclude from the way this is presented that this sentence is nothing more or less than a rightwingers idea of a funny haha joke. You don’t have to ask, “Well, exactly what are those circumstances, Harvey?” Anyone with half a brain can infer that Mansfield, with a certainly approahching 1, can only mean, “If Hillary Clinton was president. I could see myself defending the rule of law over a strong executive.”

But Mansfield isn’t just making a rightwing Hillary in-joke (okay, maybe it’s about Kerry, but you get the idea). It’s much more ominous than that, although he doesn’t say so outright, ’cause he doesn’t mean just Hillary or whomever is the Satan du jour of the right. Mansfield’s essay makes very little overt sense, as we’ll see. But it all becomes crystal clear when you realize that he is surreptitiously telling his audience that he would never defend the rule of law whenever a big D or a small d democrat is in power for the very simple reason that they have no legitimacy within the American government.

Mansfield pulls off this amazing stunt partly through his rhetorical emphases and omissions. It is no accident that various forms of the word “republican” – both capitalized and otherwise – occur at least 20 times in his essay, usually in an obviously positive sense. In addition, the first time the word “republic” appears is in paragraph 4 (and the term itself is repeated 16 times).

By contrast, take a look at the D word, democracy. It occurs only twice, in paragraph 16 of 28 paragraphs, ie. more than halfway through the structure of the essay. As for the word “democrat” and related forms, it occurs only five times, the first time again in paragraph 16. And here is the context for the first time the word “democratize” is used, literally overwhelmed by all those republics and republicans:

Republican government cannot survive, as we would say, by ideology alone. The republican genius is dominant in America, where there has never been much support for anything like an ancien régime, but support for republicanism is not enough to make a viable republic. The republican spirit can actually cause trouble for republics if it makes people think that to be republican it is enough merely to oppose monarchy. Such an attitude tempts a republican people to republicanize everything so as to make government resemble a monarchy as little as possible.

Although the Federalist made a point of distinguishing a republic from a democracy (by which it meant a so-called pure, nonrepresentative democracy), the urge today to democratize everything has similar bad effects. To counter this reactionary republican (or democratic, in today’s language) belief characteristic of shortsighted partisans, the Federalist made a point of holding the new, the novel, American republic to the test of good government as opposed merely to that of republican government.

If you understand what Mansfield is saying here, please stop reading right now and get thee to a psychiatrist because you are seriously deluded. In truth, “colorless green ideas sleep furiously” contains more of what we on Planet Earth call meaning.

I simply have no idea what Mansfield means by a “pure nonrepresentative democracy.”* More incoherently, to Mansfield, democracy is the term used today to describe a “reactionary republican” belief. Huh? Democracy is reactionary republicanism? Furthermore, this democracy, for Mansfield, is “characteristic of shortsighted partisans” who are committed merely “to make government resemble a monarchy as little as possible,” all of which is opposed to “the new, the novel American republic.” Wha? I’ve read enough about democracy in the early United States to know that this is a truly meaningless overgeneralization (see Wilentz’s “The Rise of American Democracy”). This makes no sense whatsoever if he is talking about the United States, instead of a United States in the galaxy Glorm.

But this much is very clear: Mansfield thinks “bad effects” emerge from “the urge today to democratize everything.” And this much also is clear – whatever the hell Mansfield means by democracy and democratization, it is opposed to republicanism in his mind. And democracy is not a good thing at all.

In other words, through his rhetoric, Mansfield has literally written Democrats (and those who simply are pro-democracy) – not just the demonic Hillary – out of consideration for any defense he might give for a strong executive (if he hasn’t all but written democrats, Democrats, and democracy out of American history altogether). And he has done this not by being up front about it, ie. in what liberals would deem an “intellectually honest” manner but instead by sheer academic obfuscation and deception. His pro-forma attempt to claim towards the end that he is being essentially party neutral is pure bullshit – it is undermined by his rhetoric throughout the rest of the essay.

But wait! There’s more! Let’s go back to that paragraph 3. Notice another rhetorical trick at work. A “living Constitution” – such a nice-sounding phrase! It sounds like it’s a Good Thing so Mansfield wants to exploit the term for its warm, fuzzy connotation. It’s almost pro-life, get it? The problem is that a “living Constitution” already is a term of art that liberals use. No matter, if you truly don’t care what words mean. Mansfield simply deploys some slippery revisionary rhetoric and lo and behold! We read that a “living Constitution” entails “flexibility” which “keeps it in its original form and spirit.”

The mind reels at the numerous perversions of language at work in Mansfield’s ploy. The s-called dead Constitution (Scalia’s adjective) of the “Originalists” actually is alive because it is reified. And it’s reifiication is its flexibility! This is Newspeak put through a meat grinder designed by Derrida.

And this is only the beginning. Like Jeff Goldblum in The Fly, Mansfield creates a bizarre, inhuman… thing that is one third Hamilton, one third Mansfield, and two thirds Machiavelli. (Yes, I know, duh, that’s more than 100%, but that is the sense of what Mansfield does. Hamilton’s clearly just there to put American Founders lip gloss on The Creature’s puss). Let’s attend closely to what he writes here, because you might think this is Hamiltonianism. But it is not Hamilton, rather Mansfield, who insists that “energy” must require coercion. And it is not Hamilton, but Machiavelli, who insists that the best source of energy comes from an all-powerful tyrant:

Law assumes obedience, and as such seems oblivious to resistance to the law by the “governed,” as if it were enough to require criminals to turn themselves in. [Note the totally fallacious argument from absurdity: nobody ever seriously argued that.] No, the law must be “enforced,” as we say. There must be police, and the rulers over the police must use energy (Alexander Hamilton’s term) in addition to reason. It is a delusion to believe that governments can have energy without ever resorting to the use of force.

The best source of energy turns out to be the same as the best source of reason–one man. One man, or, to use Machiavelli’s expression, uno solo, will be the greatest source of energy if he regards it as necessary to maintaining his own rule.

Finally, there’s this whopper. You’d be hard pressed to guess, at first glance, to know what Mansfield is talking about here, but what he’s really saying is that torture can be a good thing and so can spying on Americans without a warrant. Notice how, in order to make his argument, Mansfield uses the principle of flexible reification he defined earlier in his deconstruction – no other word is appropriate – of the term “living constitution”

In our time, however, an opinion has sprung up in liberal circles particularly that civil liberties must always be kept intact regardless of circumstances. This opinion assumes that civil liberties have the status of natural liberties, and are inalienable. This means that the Constitution has the status of what was called in the 17th-century natural public law; it is an order as natural as the state of nature from which it emerges. In this view liberty has just one set of laws and institutions that must be kept inviolate, lest it be lost.

But Locke was a wiser liberal. His institutions were “constituted,” less by creation than by modification of existing institutions in England, but not deduced as invariable consequences of disorder in the state of nature. He retained the difference, and so did the Americans, between natural liberties, inalienable but insecure, and civil liberties, more secure but changeable. Because civil liberties are subject to circumstances, a free constitution needs an institution responsive to circumstances, an executive able to be strong when necessary.

God, what a sleaze he is. Mansfield’s intention is to eviscerate habeas corpus, but he doesn’t mention that, referring only to an undefined “civil liberties.” Nor would I call Mansfield, in any sense, a clear thinker, even about his own intentions. He can’t even come directly out and say when he would defend the rule of law over that of a tyrant (Mansfield’s term, borrowed from Machiavelli ) in the United States. What he is saying is merely gobbledy gook, pseudo-postmodernism, fakery without the endearing humor of Alan Sokal’s immortal essay, “Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity .

No, Mansfield, like Joe Morecraft, like David Klinghoffer, like Pat Robertson, and Dick Cheney, et al, et al, et al, is simply one more lunatic right winger with a propensity to lie and deceive, and with shit for brains.

SPECIAL NOTE FOR RIGHTWINGERS AND OTHERS WITH SEVERE COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENTS: Can a conservative be, in any real sense, “intellectually honest” or a clear thinker? Let me put this way. If Mansfield is a conservative, if Morecraft is, if Klinghoffer, Robertson, and Cheney are conservatives, then the answer is, “No, never.”

You disagree? Well then, it is up to real conservatives to rescue the term “conservative” from the rightwing lunatics who have redefined it as the ne plus ultra of intellectual dishonesty and stupidity. And that rescue begins by making it quite clear that conservatives not only place enormous distance between themselves and the extremist Bushies, but that they articulate a modern conservative philosophy of genuine intellectual merit. So far, I haven’t seen even a glimmer that such a thing is happening.

*Mansfield may be referring to a plebiscite, but who can tell? His phraseology smells like the kind of brain dead misunderstandings that abound in “intelligent design” creationism, where they rail against “Darwinists” who, say the creationists, believe that life self-organized and evolved from random processes – is a spectacularly distorted and stupid precis that bears no relationship to the reality of how evolution by natural selection actually works.

[Updated immediately after first posting to remove some comments about Glenn’s post that seemed, wrongly, excessively critical.]

Well, Waddaya Know?

by digby

Circuit City’s Job Cuts Backfiring, Analysts Say

Circuit City fired 3,400 of its highest-paid store employees in March, saying it needed to hire cheaper workers to shore up its bottom line. Now, the Richmond electronics retailer says it expects to post a first-quarter loss next month, and analysts are blaming the job cuts.

The company, which on Monday also revised its outlook for the first half of its fiscal year ending Feb. 29, 2008, cited poor sales of large flat-panel and projection televisions. Analysts said Circuit City had cast off some of its most experienced and successful people and was losing business to competitors who have better-trained employees.

“I think even though sales were soft in March, this is clearly why April sales were worse. They were replaced with less knowledgeable associates,” said Tim Allen, an analyst with Jefferies & Co.

In particular, the televisions showing disappointing results are “intensive sales” requiring more informed employees, Allen said. “It’s a big-ticket purchase for somebody. And if they feel like they’re not getting the right advice or are being misled by someone who doesn’t know, it would be definitely frustrating. They will take their business elsewhere.”

Who would ever have imagined that customers would want someone knowledgeable and experienced to explain big ticket electronic items to them before they lay out thousands of dollars? Any pimply faced teen-ager can do it, right? Boy, these businessmen shure r smart.

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Yearning For A Tyrant

by digby

Senior Bush administration officials told Congress on Tuesday that they could not pledge that the administration would continue to seek warrants from a secret court for a domestic wiretapping program, as it agreed to do in January.

Rather, they argued that the president had the constitutional authority to decide for himself whether to conduct surveillance without warrants.

As a result of the January agreement, the administration said that the National Security Agency’s domestic spying program has been brought under the legal structure laid out in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires court-approved warrants for the wiretapping of American citizens and others inside the United States.

But on Tuesday, the senior officials, including Michael McConnell, the new director of national intelligence, said they believed that the president still had the authority under Article II of the Constitution to once again order the N.S.A. to conduct surveillance inside the country without warrants.

[…]

Several Democratic lawmakers expressed frustration on Tuesday that the administration had not provided documents related to the National Security Agency program, which the White House called the Terrorist Surveillance Program. They suggested that they would be reluctant to agree to a change in the surveillance law without more information from the White House.

“To this day, we have never been provided the presidential authorization that cleared that program to go or the attorney general-Department of Justice opinions that declared it to be lawful,” said Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Democrat of Rhode Island. “Where’s the transparency as to the presidential authorizations for this closed program? That’s a pretty big ‘we’re not going to tell you’ in this new atmosphere of trust we’re trying to build.”

Good luck with that.

Glenn Greenwald discusses Harvey Mansfield’s latest assault on American values in today’s Wall Street Journal, which dovetails nicely with the administration’s continued insistence that the rules just don’t apply to them.

The article bears this headline: The Case for the Strong Executive — Under some circumstances, the Rule of Law must yield to the need for Energy. And it is the most explicit argument I have seen yet for vesting in the President the power to override and ignore the rule of law in order to recieve the glories of what Mansfield calls “one-man rule.”

That such an argument comes from Mansfield is unsurprising. He has long been a folk hero to the what used to be the most extremist right-wing fringe but is now the core of the Republican Party. He devoted earlier parts of his career to warning of the dangers of homosexuality, particularly its effeminizing effect on our culture.

He has a career-long obsession with the glories of tyrannical power as embodied by Machiavelli’s Prince, which is his model for how America ought to be governed. And last year, he wrote a book called Manliness in which “he urges men, and especially women, to understand and accept manliness” — which means that “women are the weaker sex,” “women’s bodies are made to attract and to please men” and “now that women are equal, they should be able to accept being told that they aren’t, quite.” Publisher’s Weekly called it a “juvenile screed.”

I’ll leave it to Bob Altemeyer and others to dig though all of that to analyze what motivates Mansfield and his decades-long craving for strong, powerful, unchallengeable one-man masculine rule — though it’s more self-evident than anything else.

But reading Mansfield has real value for understanding the dominant right-wing movement in this country. Because he is an academic, and a quite intelligent one, he makes intellectually honest arguments, by which I mean that he does not disguise what he thinks in politically palatable slogans, but instead really describes the actual premises on which political beliefs are based.

And that is Mansfield’s value; he is a clear and honest embodiment of what the Bush movement is. In particular, he makes crystal clear that the so-called devotion to a “strong executive” by the Bush administration and the movement which supports it is nothing more than a belief that the Leader has the power to disregard, violate, and remain above the rule of law. And that is clear because Mansfied explicitly says that. And that is not just Mansfield’s idiosyncratic belief. He is simply stating — honestly and clearly — the necessary premises of the model of the Omnipotent Presidency which has taken root under the Bush presidency.

This is a psychological problem more than an ideology, perhaps even some sort of massive sexual identity crisis. When frustrated that they cannot convince the people to conform to their will, they simply force them. That is simple authoritarianism and it’s become quite the rage on the right of late, (which is darkly amusing considering their years of railing against totalitarian communism.)

We are not going to hear the end of it for a while. Their failure so total, and the embarrassment so complete, that the yearning for a rightwing tyrant on a white horse is palpable. You hear things like this every day now:

When I see the worsening degeneracy in our politicians, our media, our educators, and our intelligentsia, I can’t help wondering if the day may yet come when the only thing that can save this country is a military coup.

I guess that whole “they’re evil and we’re good and they hate us for our freedom” thing didn’t work out.

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Give Me Your Tired, Your Deranged

by digby

Via Brad Blog, I see that Christopher Hitchens had one of his little public hissy fits at the LA Times Book Fair this week-end.

I’m sure you’ll agree that it’s kind of touching to see a man who just became and American citizen on April 13th repeatedly call someone a fascist crackpot and demand that he be muzzled and removed for asking a question. And after a stirring defense of the first amendment too. Is this a great country or what?

More here.

Also, what’s with Giuliani’s angry tirade about ferrets? This man has some very big emotional issues. He worries me as much as Bush did.

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Ideological Failure

by digby

A reminder to all you beltway insiders. Go check out the:

Failure of Conservatism Conference

Space is still available for the luncheon debate between Robert Kuttner, co-editor of The American Prospect, and William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard and a leading conservative spokesman. The lunch is from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m.

Location:

National Press Club, 13th Floor
529 14th Street NW
Washington, DC 20045

202-662-7500

The failures of the Bush administration — from Katrina to Iraq — are more than a matter of incompetence and cronyism. They are a matter of ideology. The administration’s abysmal performance is rooted in the set of conservative beliefs that are at the heart of its decision-making. Conservatism has failed, and will continue to fail, because it has a wrong view of how the world works.

Heh. I think that’s just a little bit too reality based, don’t you? Conservatism can never fail, it can only be failed. Down with Bush, all hail Saint Ronnie of Reagan.

But it’s good to see progressives make the case. It’s true, after all.

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My Favorite Columnist

by tristero

When asked, Duncan once responded that Jon Chait was his favorite columnist, an opinion Duncan has changed. Me, it’s a slam dunk: Paul Krugman for all the obvious reasons. He doesn’t waste my time obsessing over someone’s hair. He writes clearly and can rise on occasion to eloquence. But most importantly, when it mattered, he refused to avert his eyes, refused to buckle under to intimidation, refused to deny reality. For years – literally – Krugman’s was the only consistently sane column in the upper echelons of the mainstream American press. It still is unique because Krugman is, unlike nearly every other American political columnist, actually qualified to opine in detail on a rather important subject, economics. Most importantly, he was right. And that wasn’t an accident.

But the all time greatest political columnist of my lifetime was undoubtedly Russell Baker. Elegant, witty, compassionate, clear-eyed and intelligent, Baker was in a class by himself. He still writes the occasional article for New York Review of Books – recently, he wrote a round-up of revisionary tomes on Ronald Reagan which he skewered so cheerfully and effectively that the clueless authors probably thought he was praising them – but he is sorely missed.

With these exceptions, and perhaps a handful more that you folks have read in other sources than the Times, most published mainstream opinion writing in the papers and magazines is far below the incisiveness and intelligence of the best of the blogs. And in fact the sheer mediocrity of print columnists – Friedman – as well as their blithering stupidity – Brooks – surely must be a factor in the decline of newspaper readership.

As for Jon Chait, well…he supported the war when he should have known better. There’s a myth that simply won’t die, that the horror we see today in Iraq was unpredictable. Here’s Nora Ephron’s version:

[Tenet and Powell] couldn’t have known at that time [Powell’s infamous UN speech] that the war would be such an unmitigated disaster; they surely couldn’t have known that there wouldn’t even be a July 4th sparkler found in all of Iraq;

Well, actually, they could have and should have. And so should have Chait.

I suppose it’s not fair to dismiss someone’s entire corpus of opinion-making because they happened to make one itty-bitty mistake about something like an illegal, immoral, totally unjustifiable invasion of a foreign country that – no matter how depraved the leadership might be – never attacked the US and had nothing to do whatsoever with 9/11. But that’s just the way I am. After William Buckley called for all HIV positive people to be tattooed on their buttocks – yes, he did, you can look it up – it should have been quite clear to anyone with a brain that you could get more coherent political and cultural commentary from reading Mad Magazine than the National Review. Similarly, when Chait supported Bush/Iraq.

As I’ve said before, there is a serious intellectual crisis in this country. Bush/Iraq – especially the failure of the media to catch on before it was too late – is a direct consequence of that. That folks like Chait still command enough respect to have the opportunity to write cover articles for the New Republic – on any subject – while those who were absolutely right about this debacle from the start are still all but completely ignored by “respectable” opinion-making journalism should be cause for genuine alarm. Without truly intelligent, educated, and street-smart voices available to raise a …hullabaloo before it’s too late, this country is almost guaranteed to repeat the spectacular debacle of Iraq in the near future. And I don’t see enough of those voices in the mainstream political discourse.

Why I Fight

by digby

I have not had time to really get into Jonathan Chait’s cover story in this weeks New Republic but I will write something more about it soon. In the meantime, I did find these paragraphs intriguing in light of something else I read this morning:

…because they convey facts and opinions about the news to their readers, bloggers associated with the netroots are often mistaken for journalists. That is, as reporter Garance Franke-Ruta (who covers the blogs) has put it, a “category error.” This was thrown into stark relief earlier this year, when John Edwards hired Amanda Marcotte and Melissa McEwan, two bloggers who were prominent in the netroots. The pair quickly came under enough fire for past controversial blog posts–Marcotte, for example, had speculated, “What if Mary had taken Plan B after the Lord filled her with his hot, white, sticky Holy Spirit?”–that the Edwards campaign decided to cut them loose. Before it announced the decision, however, Marcotte and McEwan’s allies lobbied heavily on their behalf. The liberal online magazine Salon reported the firings, but the Edwards camp hunkered down and refused to release a public statement while it decided on a course of action, then denied the firings to Salon the following day. Liberal bloggers in close contact with the campaign remained resolutely cryptic about what they knew. “The bloggers closed ranks around the Edwards campaign, some even claiming that Salon had gotten the story wrong,” Salon’s Joan Walsh later reported. To Walsh and other journalists, the relevant metric is true versus untrue. To an activist, the relevant metric is politically helpful versus politically unhelpful.

There is a term for this sort of political discourse: propaganda. The word has a bad odor, but it is not necessarily a bad thing. Propaganda is often true, and it can be deployed on behalf of a worthy cause (say, the fight against Nazism in World War II). Still, propaganda should not be confused with intellectual inquiry. Propagandists do not follow their logic wherever it may lead them; they are not interested in originality. Propaganda is an attempt to marshal arguments in order to create a specific real-world result–to win a political war.

The word propaganda is a loaded term in modern American parlance and he must know that. I don’t actually think that advocacy journalism (or activist blogging) is dishonest, which is what Chait is suggesting, however vaguely. Lying or making up facts is unacceptable for people of integrity just as it is for a defense lawyer arguing for her client in a court of law, or a great political debate — which is a much less provocative way to discuss blogging and netroots activism. I wish that Chait had provided at least one example of propaganda among the netroots besides the very vague story of Marcotte and McEwen. That is such an inside baseball process story that even if it were true, it wouldn’t actually illustrate the propagandistic nature of blogging.

Liberal bloggers advocate for their political causes, people, party, ideas, etc and they make the best argument they can. The people who read us, the politicians, the electorate (to the extent that any of these arguments flow out of the sphere into the mainstream) are the judges. That is not propaganda as we understand it in 2007. I would say it’s not even PR or advertising, both of which suggest some sort of message coordination of which I have also seen little evidence. The blogosphere/netroots is more of an organism that thrives on an extended 24/7 conversation and nobody knows yet how ideas are actually honed and disseminated. But the ones that come out of this seem to me to be mostly in the finest traditions of democratic and parliamentary debate, satire and humor and plain old political strategy, even if we are “vituperative” and “foul-mouthed” about it. There is very little, if any, “messaging” as we think of it in political terms. I’m not sure what Chait thinks he knows about the way we operate, but it’s very, very ad hoc and viral. It’s the internets not the Comintern.

Which brings me to the other thing I read today, just after glancing at the Chait article:

Hugh Hewitt: [Lawrence Wright] said absolutely, it is not the case it’s a strategic disaster. While there may be more jihadis in Iraq than there were before, it’s not like our intervention in Iraq created them, and he went on to characterize their camps in Mali, their camps in Gaza…

Michael Isikoff: Right.

HH: Their Waziristan…that they are manufacturing…they were manufactured for a decade in Afghanistan.

MI: Right.

HH: And now, they’re coming to al Anbar Province, because that’s where they can kill the great Satan. And so we’re not manufacturing them, we’re gathering them in one place…

MI: Right.

HH: And they’re surging against us. That’s a different spin. I’m not saying it’s the facts on the ground, either.

[…]

HH: …And Michael Isikoff, what do you see, if the Democrats have their way, what do you see happening there in five years?

MI: I mean, look. If any of us could foresee the future, and knew what Iraq was going to look like down the road, we’d be better off than anybody else in Washington.

HH: But we have to guess, right? We always have to guess.

MI: We have to guess. We have to guess. I mean, we know that a lot of bad guesses were made by this administration in the invasion.

HH: Again, that’s spin.

MI: No, no, no, no, no, no. We know that.

HH: Give me a specific.

MI: They did not…a specific?

HH: Of a bad guess.

MI: Did they anticipate the sectarian warfare that was going to take place?

HH: No. Okay…

MI: Did they tell the country that there’s a high risk that we’re going to be enmeshed in a civil war in Iraq, in which thousands of Americans…

HH: Civil war is itself a spin, though.

MI: Well, what do you call it?

HH: That is a characterization…I call it an insurrection, I call it an al Qaeda surge, I call it bad militias in Baghdad.

MI: Well…

HH: But a civil war, where you’ve got Sunni and Shia…actually, the one thing Petraeus has also said…

MI: Fighting each other. Fighting each other. That’s…

HH: There are lots of definitions. It’s spin.

[…]

MI: The central argument [for war in Iraq] was weapons of mass destruction.

HH: That was Colin Powell. Again, that’s spin. Michael Isikoff, that’s spin.

I would challenge anyone to find a prominent liberal blogger as disingenuous or as bizarrely unresponsive as Hugh Hewitt is in that conversation. We joke about being the “reality based community” on the left, but it’s literally true, certainly by comparison to that nonsense. The right wing denial of objective reality and the willingness to simply assert their own view that facts are liberal spin and conservative spin is factual is one of the biggest challenges the progressive movement (and the nation) faces. It has bred a cynicism and confusion that is going to be very difficult to turn around.

I didn’t start blogging to deny reality or create another narrative out of whole cloth. (The bloggy jargon about “framing” and “narratives and “memes” are btw, contra Chait, just shorthand for “making a good argument”, “telling our side of the story” and “ideas.” They are not nefarious revolutionary propaganda terms designed to mislead.) I started blogging for the opposite reason. What I saw was a political establishment enmeshed in an extremely disorienting up-is-downism, perpetuated by a right wing machine that had used sophisticated marketing techniques, propaganda and plain old lies to completely distort our common perceptions of reality — as Hewitt so perfectly demonstrates. Right about the time that Republicans started impeaching presidents for minor sexual indiscretions and dishonestly manipulating every lever of power they had to attain the presidency I knew politics had gone insane, not me. (And I think my judgment has been pretty well vindicated if I do say so myself.)

I try to see the world as clearly as I can because to do otherwise is to lose one’s mind. I’m sure I succumb to group think from time to time and avoid writing about things I find difficult to discuss or about which I feel I have no particular insight. (You’ll notice that I rarely engage in arcane economics.) I don’t pretend to be entirely objective but I try to be a clear eyed person who calls it as I see it. I honestly can’t understand how we can survive as a culture if we can’t find a way to get past this “everything is spin” idea that Hewitt is promoting. It’s the right that pushed that into the discourse and it’s the netroots that are trying to unravel it and get back to some sort of common understanding of what constitutes reality.

More than anything I am interested in combating this epistemological relativism that has entered the body politic; things like the irrational dismissal of science or the insistence that cutting taxes produces more revenue or any of a thousand other assaults on reality. I can’t help but be slightly insulted that my participation in the netroots movement is even being compared to such demagoguery and deviousness. I do not think we are the same animals and if the netroots become that I will no longer be a part of it.

I’m a liberal and proud of it and I think the world will be a better place if liberal policies have a greater voice and influence in the discourse. I want Democrats to win and will do what I can to help them since they are the vehicle for progressive and liberal politics in our system. But more than that I want to have a culture where liberal ideas are honestly represented and rightwing lies and manipulation are seriously challenged. I do not believe that you can leave that up to some disinterested, objective seekers of truth because they proved over the course of a couple of decades that they were much too weak and gullible to challenge the conservative onslaught. So I and many others stepped up. Waiting for everyone to “see the truth” just wasn’t working out (which Chait admits in his article.)

Overall, the piece is insightful in some respects and I don’t mean to pick it apart. But none of this happened in a vacuum, and Chait rather scrupulously avoids delving too deeply into the rightwing’s strategic mendacity. And without that you can’t really understand what brought us to this place and what motivates us to move ahead. Rather than wanting to become a competing propaganda organ, I think most of us actually want to reintroduce the idea of honest political debate because we believe we will win on the merits. (Why else have the Republicans found it necessary to lie, cheat and steal to the degree they have?) The first step in doing that is to dismantle their propaganda, which is what we are doing. No one that I know of has ever suggested that we create our own.

Update: What Atrios said.

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They Got Bored?

by digby

It appears that the LAPD just decided to start firing rubber bullets into the immigration rally this evening without warning. There were a bunch of families with kids there.

I’m sure the cops only shot at the illegals, so it’s ok. (Is a fetus an illegal if it’s inside an illegal alien? If so does it deserve to be protected by the culture of life? Hmmm.)

Think Progress has the CNN video.

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